About

“Good storytelling is a sort of fearless magic act, in which events move too quickly to tolerate objection… And this is the way that director Randy Baker tells this story: with such assurance and commitment that the impossible seems true.” – DC Theater Scene

Randy Baker is an award-winning playwright, director and co-Artistic Director of Rorschach Theatre in Washington DC, which he founded with Jenny McConnell Frederick in the summer of 1999. He is also adjunct faculty at George Washington University and a frequent guest artist and educator at a number of institutions including Theatre Lab, National Conservatory of Dramatic Arts, and Imagination Stage. He recently finished his residency as a member of The Playwright’s Arena, a part of Arena Stage’s American Voices New Play Institute.

Upcoming projects include The H Street Miracle Plays at Rorschach Theatre (a site specific show taking place in multiple locations up and down H Street NE) and Wolves in the Lion City (A commissioned piece for the teens at Theatre Lab about American teens growing up in Singapore). The Rorschach Theatre 2018/2019 season is underway with three world premieres and a number of unique events.

Readings and workshops of plays includeThe Burning Roadwhich was developed at Arena stage and had a reading in the Kogod Cradle in March 2014; Forgotten Kingdoms which has received readingsat National New Play Network, Kennedy Center Page to Stage festival, Inkwell Theatre, The Arts Club of Washington, Jakarta Players (Indonesia), Wordsmyth Theater (Houston) and the National Newborn Festival at MTWorks (New York) where it won the Audience Choice Award; Monastery which was developed through Theater J’s Locally Grown program and had a public reading in May 2013; Circus of Fallen Angelswhich was commissioned by and performed at the National Conservatory for Dramatic Arts and received a workshop production at American University; Gilgameshwhich received a staged reading at Rorschach Theatre and Voxwhich was developedat Theater Alliance.

His directing has been nominated twice for Helen Hayes awards and Rorschach Theatre has been nominated for over a dozen Helen Hayes awards. He won a Mary Goldwater award for his creative and producer work with Rorschach Theatre and the 2012 Larry Neal Writers’ Award.

The son of educators and the grandson of Pentecostal missionaries, Randy grew up overseas, mostly in Singapore and Malaysia where his family still lives. He attended the University of Richmond before moving to Washington DC in 1997 and currently lives in Takoma Park with his wife, costume designer Debra Kim Sivigny. He received his MFA in creative writing from Goddard College and is a member of the Dramatists Guild of America.

PRESS

“It’s strong, stirring stuff—a modern fable with an oblique moral. It enchants us like a dream and kicks like a nightmare.” – Washington City Paper (About After the Quake, 2011: Directing)

VERY STILL AND HARD TO SEE Photo: C. Stan Photography

“The play opens with one of the most masterfully atmospheric sequences I’ve witnessed in a DC theater. Beneath droning 1940’s swing and eerie lighting, the audience finds itself surrounded by masked ghouls shambling across the stage with mannequin-like stiffness. Baker and his design team blend the terror of white-masked intruders from films like Funny Games with the jerky, unnerving movement of Japanese movie ghosts; the whole setup is a horror fan’s dream. very still & hard to see is an immersive carousel of horrors that will have you checking the locks and looking under the bed. Just remember: there’s no shame in sleeping with the lights on. — DC Theatre Scene (About Very Still and Hard to See, 2015: Directing)

Truth & Beauty Bombs lights the world on fire and dances in the flames. It destroys preconceived notions and offers a new, poetic language for philosophical discussions of life and death.” – DC Theatre Scene (About Truth & Beauty Bombs: A Softer World, 2015: Playwriting)

“Extraordinarily ambitious… Staged inside Atlas Performing Arts Center’s Theatre Lab, the action takes place both inside and outside a circle of seats where the audience sits. The walls are covered in a maze of brown string and bare light bulbs occasionally flicker overhead… The universally strong performances and the heady concepts of desire, self-control, and fate make this an absorbing and inventive work.” – The Washingtonian (About The Minotaur, 2013: Directing)

“Those details pay off when Puck morphs from a shadow into a three-dimensional sprite who bears a distinct resemblance to the two-dimensional version. The likeness between silhouette and humanoid is one of many rewarding touches in director Randy Baker’s beautiful production.” –Washington Post (About A Midsummer Night’s Dream, 2016: Directing)

“Forgotten Kingdoms touches on such themes as culture clash, the legacy of colonialism and competition among religions, but it is far from an issue play. Bold and often poignant, the work extends an appealingly personal and idiosyncratic vision, rich in telling detail. The title may reference forgetting, but the play often seems as clear and specific as a total-recall memory.” – Washington Post (About Forgotten Kingdoms, 2017: Playwriting)